SAN DIEGO UNIFIED REACHES DEAL WITH TEACHERS
Agreement covers number of days schools will be open
The number of days San Diego Unified students will be able to attend school in person once schools reopen the week of April 12 will depend on how many of their schoolmates also choose to return to school, according to an agreement between the school district and its teachers union.
For example, a school where all families choose to return in person may be more likely to offer two days a week of inperson instruction for each student, but a school where only half of families choose to return to campus may be more likely to offer four days a week of in-person instruction, according to union officials.
San Diego Unified announced Sunday night that the “default” school schedule will be four days a week of on-site student attendance. District officials on Monday refrained from saying exactly how many days a week most students can expect to attend school in person.
“Our expectation and our hope is to have students on campus as much as possible and as long as possible to mimic a regular school day and a regular school week,” said Nicole DeWitt, instructional officer for San Diego Unified.
Superintendent Cindy Marten said she knows that many families want full-time in-person instruction.
“The goal here is five days if families want it, and we know that. We’ve been hearing from families that they want that,” Marten said.
Preliminary tallies of a recent districtwide parent survey show that roughly 70 percent of families said they want students to return to school for in-person instruction, district spokeswoman Maureen Magee said.
San Diego Unified, like all other county school districts that have reopened, will offer families a choice of returning to school for hybrid instruction — part in person, part online — or staying at home in distance learning. The district said schools will send details of their learning models to parents on March 22.
In addition to parent choices, in-person schedules will depend on how much classroom space schools have.
Schools will limit the number of students who can be at school at any one time in order to have at least 5 feet of distance between student chairs in classrooms, a requirement set in the union agreement. That is more stringent than the state’s required 4 feet.
The default school schedule will be six hours a day for students.
Elementary students will get three hours of instruction in the morning, including a half-hour break, then two more hours in the afternoon, which will include at least one hour of activities such as tutoring, smallgroup instruction or other support, according to the agreement.
Middle and high school students will get three hours of instruction, plus an additional hour that will be used for office hours, small-group instruction or working with students, while the rest of students work on their own, the agreement says.
At least three hours of instruction each day will involve teaching in-person students and online-only students simultaneously. It’s up to teachers to decide how they will do that, but teachers could, for example, teach Zoom lessons in their classroom or livestream themselves teaching a class.
The rest of the school day will be teachers’ prep time, for such tasks as grading, lesson planning or working with colleagues.
For the rest of the school day when students are not receiving direct instruction, they may participate in other school activities, such as P.E., enrichment programs, extracurricular activities, clubs and sports, DeWitt said.
The components of the school day will mimic the distance-learning structure that the district has been using this year, said Kisha Borden, president of the San Diego Unified teachers union.
“We wanted to make sure those students who were remaining online had consistency and there was some continuity in their schedule and their online learning,” Borden said. “So we didn’t want this transition to onsite for some students to disrupt or degrade the experience of the online-only students.”
Sunday’s agreement also outlines COVID-19 safety requirements schools will follow.
For example, regular COVID-19 testing will be mandatory for staff members regardless of whether they are showing symptoms. Testing will remain optional, but highly encouraged, for students.
All classrooms will have either a MERV 13 air filter installed or portable air purifiers to increase ventilation. The goal for all classrooms is to replace the air in the room at least five times each hour.
Masks will be required of all adults and all students ages 2 and older. The district says it will provide reasonable mask accommodations for students with disabilities.
The district may provide working accommodations for staff members on a caseby-case basis, such as a working-from-home agreement, eliminating nonessential job duties, and allowing leave time, according to the agreement.